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101. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Kyle Fruh Climate Change Driven Displacement and Justice: The Role of Reparations
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An increasingly wide array of moral arguments has coalesced in recent work on the question of how to confront the phenomenon of climate change driven displacement. Despite invoking a range of disparate moral principles, arguments addressing displacement across international borders seem to converge on a similar range of policy remedies: expansion of the 1951 Refugee Convention to include ecological refugees, expedited immigration (whether individual or collective), or, for entire political communities that have suffered displacement, even the ceding of sovereign territory. Curiously, this convergence is observable even across the distinction of interest for this paper: the distinction between arguments that proceed in the vein of reparations and arguments that reach their conclusion without invoking any reparations. Even though as a collection they appear to point in the same direction, I argue that non-reparative arguments that seek to address climate change driven displacement have several shortcomings, such that climate justice should be understood to include an indispensable role for reparations.
102. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Michael Ball-Blakely Orcid-ID Migration, Mobility, and Spatial Segregation: Freedom of Movement as Equal Opportunity
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Many supporters of open borders argue that restrictions on immigration are unjust in part because they undermine equal opportunity. Borders prevent the globally least-advantaged from pursuing desirable opportunities abroad, cementing arbitrary facts about birth and citizenship. In this paper I advance an argument from equal opportunity to global freedom of movement. In addition to preventing people from pursuing desirable opportunities, borders also create a prone, segregated population that can be dominated and exploited. Restrictions on mobility do not just trap people in bad opportunity sets—they help create bad opportunities by isolating the negative externalities of production and foreign policy. Freedom of movement can play a vital role in spreading risks and burdens, incentivizing their mitigation. Using an analysis of feudalism, segregation, and the transnational economy, I illustrate the centrality of space and mobility, showing why freedom of movement is a necessary tool for preventing political and economic oppression.
103. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Gajendran Ayyathurai Emigration Against Caste, Transformation of the Self, and Realization of the Casteless Society in Indian Diaspora
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Regardless of British colonial motives, many Indians migrated against caste/casteism across Indian, Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans. British Guiana marked the entry of Indian indentured laborers in the Caribbean in 1838. Paradoxically, thereafter religious and caste identities have risen among them. This article aims to unravel the intersectionality of religion, caste, and gender in the Caribbean Indian diaspora. Based on the recent field study in Guyana and Suriname as well as from the interdisciplinary sources, this essay examines: how brahminical deities, temples, and patriarchal institutions have re-invented caste-based asymmetrical sociality in the plantation colonies. Contrary to such re-establishment of brahminical inequalities, it argues, the castefree Indo-Guyanese religio-cultural practices foster inter-religious and inter-racial inclusive integration. And that this has led to self-transformation as well as in the making of a casteless society in the Caribbean.
104. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Alex Sager Orcid-ID Migration and Mobility
105. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Codi Stevens Medical Sexism: Contraception Access, Reproductive Medicine, and Health Care
106. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Jessica Davis Socially Just Pedagogies: Posthumanist, Feminist and Materialist Perspectives in Higher Education
107. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Cassie Finley The Philosopher Queens
108. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Garret Merriam Heart of the Machine: Our Future in a World of Artificial Emotional Intelligence
109. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Curtis Joseph Howd On Truth
110. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Chad Wiener Medieval Sensibilities: A History of Emotions in the Middle Ages
111. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Marisol Brito The Routledge Handbook of Epistemic Injustice
112. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 22 > Issue: 1/2
Tiffany E. Montoya Understanding the Legitimacy of Movement: The Nomadism of Gitanos (Spanish Roma) and Conquistadors
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While Spain was conquering new lands in the Americas, foreigners arrived into their own—the Gitanos. Spain imposed a double-standard whereby their crossing into new, occupied, territory was legitimate, but the entry of others into Spanish territory was not. I compare and contrast these historically parallel movements of people using Deleuze and Guattari’s taxonomy of movement (what they refer to as nomadology). I conclude that the double-standard of movement was due to differences of power between these two groups, understood in terms of material conditions, a prototypical “racial contract,” and differences in the relationship to land and space. This history and analysis of colonial Spain is a critical start for Latin American postcolonial theory; it gives us a framework to study philosophies of migration and nomadism; and finally, it introduces the Gitanos (and Roma in general) as an important population to complicate critical race theory or theories of ethnicity.
113. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Joshua Kelleher God Under All: Divine Simplicity, Omni-Parthood, and the Problem of Principality in Islamic Philosophy
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In this paper, I defend an unconventional mereological framework involving the doctrine of divine simplicity, to surmount a significant yet neglected dilemma resulting from that long-standing view of God as absolutely, and uniquely, simple. This framework establishes God as literally a part of everything—an “omni-part.” Although consequential for the many prominent religious traditions featuring divine simplicity, my analysis focuses on potential implications for an important formative issue in medieval Islamic philosophy. This problem of principality, with regards to metaphysical primacy and importance, derives from Ibn Sīnā’s celebrated distinction between essence and existence, and involves determining which is genuinely, objectively, real. Instead of supporting the historically dominant opposing viewpoints advancing either the principality of existence or of essence (aṣālat al-wujūd/al-māhiyya), I claim that God as omni-part aids renewed defence of the majority rejected view which upholds the combined principality of existence and essence together. Additionally, my proposal reinforces various theological desiderata including divine omnipresence and God’s necessity across possible worlds, while also supporting new perspectives on Ibn ‘Arabi’s influential notion of waḥdat al-wūjūd, understood as the absolute unity of being.
114. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Ian Olasov Grandstanding: The Use and Abuse of Moral Talk
115. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Yuiza T. Martínez-Rivera The Morality of Urban Mobility
116. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Beba Cibralic The New Breed: What Our History with Animals Reveals about Our Future with Robots
117. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Michael Tofte Arendt on the Political
118. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Kathryn Mattingly Flynn Think Like a Feminist
119. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
Jacob N. Caton Bots and Beasts: What Makes Machines, Animals, and People Smart?
120. Essays in Philosophy: Volume > 23 > Issue: 1/2
James Murray Ethics and Insurrection: A Pragmatism for the Oppressed